Next month, singing and dancing, can help save a staple of Uptown Saint John.

"A Night For The Paramount" is a fundraising concert coming up on November 18th featuring John Morrison, Dann Downes and the Migrant Workers and The Earthbound Trio.

All proceeds from the event at the Chinese Cultural Centre will be used to saved the old theatre on King Square from the wrecker's ball.It's meant to show the need for a multi-purpose arts and culture venue in the city. For ticket info, click here

The Conservation Council is casting a skeptical eye on word the provincial government is looking at converting Coleson Cove so it will be able to burn natural gas.

David Thompson of the Conservation Council tells CHSJ News he finds it odd since the plant hasn't been used that much even with Point Lepreau being out of service.

Thompson warns if your burn natural gas without using a gas turbine, too much of it is wasted.The Alward Government finds itself in the middle of controversy over its desire to extract natural gas from the ground through fracking which creates fissures in the shale after water, chemicals and sand are pumped underground.

City Hall management needs to be overhauled...........That's John Campbell's big priority as he announces he'll be running in the May municipal election to be councillor at large. Campbell claims there's a lot of fat to be cut despite claims to the contrary.

He says front line workers coming to him with ideas and he thinks one would be to restructure management.

Ironically, Campbell has a letter before Common Council on the city's financially beleaguered pension plan. He's recommending there be a transition from a defined benefits plan to defined contributions where the benefits will depend on how the stock market performs.

He says these plans are being used by a variety of companies around the world to make it viable and financially secure.

Campbell says major projects like Peel Plaza and the transit garage on the east side have to be called into question if they adversely affect day to day services.

The risks from shale gas exploration are not manageable and health should not be traded for profit.......That was the message delivered to a public meeting at a church in the north end on Sandy Point Road by an anti-shale gas group.

Chris Rendell of Hampton Water First tells CHSJ News there should be a public inquiry held where both sides can be heard before anything moves ahead because he's skeptical of anything the Alward Government is saying about this issue.

He accuses the government of being biased in favour of shale gas exploration moving ahead even though there have been problems in every other place where shale gas development is happening.Rendell claims New Brunswick doesn't have enough people to carry out inspections and in Quebec where every shale gas well was inspected, 75 per cent of them had leaks.

Edler
mediation may be a tool that can help stem the tide of the coming grey
tsunami as the number of seniors in Canada explodes.A
pilot project in Eastern Ontario is using elder mediation to find the
best way of using funding to keep seniors in their homes.Elizabeth
Sterritt of Family Mediation Canada tells CHSJ News says these programs
are phenomenal because they create a circle of care.

She tells us there are 6000 centenarians in Canada today and that number will triple over the next twenty years.She says we have to figure out how are going to deal with all these ageing folks who may be our neighbours.

Sterritt
says in one case, the fix was taking care of a couples lawn mowing and
snow removal needs that allowed one woman the time to better care for
her husband in their home.

There may be some lead time with that 25 billion dollar shipbuilding contract awarded to Irving to construct combat naval vessels in Halifax but if Saint John companies want to get a piece of the action, they better get cracking........There's no time to waste.

So advises Pat Darrah of the Saint John Construction Association.

Darrah says these will be sophisticated ships........It's not like building a row boat.

He adds the jobs, themselves, won't start appearing for about a year and that's why he remains concerned there are no major projects on the horizon locally this winter and next spring.